Received an invoice from my ex-employer billing me for training; how to handle? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowHow do I deal with an employer withholding my paycheck?How does billing by hours work as skill increases and time to completion decreases?IT contract jobs - how and when to ask your billing rate?Standard for billing followup consultation workHow to respond to a customer's demand for payment extension?How do I prevent a client from bleeding me dry with small questions and tasks they expect to receive for free?How do I convince my employer to take my mention of resignation seriously?How to convince management of changing unethical billing practices?Should I attend an expensive employer-paid training if I plan to quit soon?My Employer forcing me to enter double billing for two customers
"and that skill is always a class skill for you" - does "always" have any meaning in Pathfinder?
Workaholic Formal/Informal
How do scammers retract money, while you can’t?
Skipping indices in a product
How to log in to Centos 7 using RDP from Win10
Inappropriate reference requests from Journal reviewers
Can I equip Skullclamp on a creature I am sacrificing?
Extending anchors in TikZ
Really confused on what inner tube would fit my BF’s new bike?
Disadvantage of gaining multiple levels at once in a short milestone-XP game
What's the best way to handle refactoring a big file?
Unreliable Magic - Is it worth it?
What exact does MIB represent in SNMP? How is it different from OID?
What does convergence in distribution "in the Gromov–Hausdorff" sense mean?
Interfacing a button to MCU (and PC) with 50m long cable
Do I need to enable Dev Hub in my PROD Org?
FBX seems to be empty when imported into Blender
At which OSI layer a user-generated data resides?
How are problems classified in Complexity Theory?
A "random" question: usage of "random" as adjective in Spanish
Why don't programming languages automatically manage the synchronous/asynchronous problem?
Example of a Mathematician/Physicist whose Other Publications during their PhD eclipsed their PhD Thesis
Is micro rebar a better way to reinforce concrete than rebar?
Number of real Solution
Received an invoice from my ex-employer billing me for training; how to handle?
The Next CEO of Stack OverflowHow do I deal with an employer withholding my paycheck?How does billing by hours work as skill increases and time to completion decreases?IT contract jobs - how and when to ask your billing rate?Standard for billing followup consultation workHow to respond to a customer's demand for payment extension?How do I prevent a client from bleeding me dry with small questions and tasks they expect to receive for free?How do I convince my employer to take my mention of resignation seriously?How to convince management of changing unethical billing practices?Should I attend an expensive employer-paid training if I plan to quit soon?My Employer forcing me to enter double billing for two customers
About 4 months ago I started a job and quit after a month due to a ton of awful things about the organization that aren't relevant here. Today I received in the mail a letter from the company stating that I owe them money, around $5500, for time spent training me, and $1500 for a software license for AutoCAD they bought for me.
They said since I quit before I was able to provide income for the company, I'm responsible for reimbursing their costs. I can post an anonymized copy of the letter if it's needed, but I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
I never signed anything saying that I'd owe them money if I quit - I have a copy of the signed employee agreement with nothing anywhere close to that in it. The AutoCAD license was installed on a work computer that never went home with me and I returned everything they gave me on my last day, down to the free shirt and water bottle.
Should I respond that I'm not paying, or just ignore this?
quitting billing
New contributor
outerviewer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
|
show 2 more comments
About 4 months ago I started a job and quit after a month due to a ton of awful things about the organization that aren't relevant here. Today I received in the mail a letter from the company stating that I owe them money, around $5500, for time spent training me, and $1500 for a software license for AutoCAD they bought for me.
They said since I quit before I was able to provide income for the company, I'm responsible for reimbursing their costs. I can post an anonymized copy of the letter if it's needed, but I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
I never signed anything saying that I'd owe them money if I quit - I have a copy of the signed employee agreement with nothing anywhere close to that in it. The AutoCAD license was installed on a work computer that never went home with me and I returned everything they gave me on my last day, down to the free shirt and water bottle.
Should I respond that I'm not paying, or just ignore this?
quitting billing
New contributor
outerviewer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
34
Actually this sounds like just one more thing to add to your list of "awful things about the organization."
– shoover
4 hours ago
1
Welcome to TheWorkplace! Please note this is not place to look for legal advice. There is LawStackExchange for general questions related to law, but please look for a professional to give you legal advice and help. Nonetheless, we can share advice here in terms on wheter this is normal/usual or not. AFAIK it isn't unless you had signed specific contracts with clauses warning you about the training costs. You might want to reach the company that licensed AutoCAD for you and try to work things out, as your former company will likely still need a license. Goodwill now can make everything easier.
– Mefitico
3 hours ago
Respond with a list of reasons why the company was awful along with a bill for $6000 in consulting fees. Don't actually do that, but it underscores that both parties attempted to engage, it was unsuccessful and after the fact conditions can't simply be dictated by one party.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
You could file a lawsuit (pro se?) so you have a judge as a referee, and see how fast they document their "oops, never mind". In all likelihood, you'd get written evidence from them that you owe nothing, and it would never go to court.
– donjuedo
2 hours ago
4
Can you add a country tag?
– ventsyv
1 hour ago
|
show 2 more comments
About 4 months ago I started a job and quit after a month due to a ton of awful things about the organization that aren't relevant here. Today I received in the mail a letter from the company stating that I owe them money, around $5500, for time spent training me, and $1500 for a software license for AutoCAD they bought for me.
They said since I quit before I was able to provide income for the company, I'm responsible for reimbursing their costs. I can post an anonymized copy of the letter if it's needed, but I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
I never signed anything saying that I'd owe them money if I quit - I have a copy of the signed employee agreement with nothing anywhere close to that in it. The AutoCAD license was installed on a work computer that never went home with me and I returned everything they gave me on my last day, down to the free shirt and water bottle.
Should I respond that I'm not paying, or just ignore this?
quitting billing
New contributor
outerviewer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
About 4 months ago I started a job and quit after a month due to a ton of awful things about the organization that aren't relevant here. Today I received in the mail a letter from the company stating that I owe them money, around $5500, for time spent training me, and $1500 for a software license for AutoCAD they bought for me.
They said since I quit before I was able to provide income for the company, I'm responsible for reimbursing their costs. I can post an anonymized copy of the letter if it's needed, but I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
I never signed anything saying that I'd owe them money if I quit - I have a copy of the signed employee agreement with nothing anywhere close to that in it. The AutoCAD license was installed on a work computer that never went home with me and I returned everything they gave me on my last day, down to the free shirt and water bottle.
Should I respond that I'm not paying, or just ignore this?
quitting billing
quitting billing
New contributor
outerviewer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
outerviewer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
edited 1 hour ago
DarkCygnus
39.2k1886168
39.2k1886168
New contributor
outerviewer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
asked 5 hours ago
outerviewerouterviewer
1093
1093
New contributor
outerviewer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
outerviewer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
outerviewer is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
34
Actually this sounds like just one more thing to add to your list of "awful things about the organization."
– shoover
4 hours ago
1
Welcome to TheWorkplace! Please note this is not place to look for legal advice. There is LawStackExchange for general questions related to law, but please look for a professional to give you legal advice and help. Nonetheless, we can share advice here in terms on wheter this is normal/usual or not. AFAIK it isn't unless you had signed specific contracts with clauses warning you about the training costs. You might want to reach the company that licensed AutoCAD for you and try to work things out, as your former company will likely still need a license. Goodwill now can make everything easier.
– Mefitico
3 hours ago
Respond with a list of reasons why the company was awful along with a bill for $6000 in consulting fees. Don't actually do that, but it underscores that both parties attempted to engage, it was unsuccessful and after the fact conditions can't simply be dictated by one party.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
You could file a lawsuit (pro se?) so you have a judge as a referee, and see how fast they document their "oops, never mind". In all likelihood, you'd get written evidence from them that you owe nothing, and it would never go to court.
– donjuedo
2 hours ago
4
Can you add a country tag?
– ventsyv
1 hour ago
|
show 2 more comments
34
Actually this sounds like just one more thing to add to your list of "awful things about the organization."
– shoover
4 hours ago
1
Welcome to TheWorkplace! Please note this is not place to look for legal advice. There is LawStackExchange for general questions related to law, but please look for a professional to give you legal advice and help. Nonetheless, we can share advice here in terms on wheter this is normal/usual or not. AFAIK it isn't unless you had signed specific contracts with clauses warning you about the training costs. You might want to reach the company that licensed AutoCAD for you and try to work things out, as your former company will likely still need a license. Goodwill now can make everything easier.
– Mefitico
3 hours ago
Respond with a list of reasons why the company was awful along with a bill for $6000 in consulting fees. Don't actually do that, but it underscores that both parties attempted to engage, it was unsuccessful and after the fact conditions can't simply be dictated by one party.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
You could file a lawsuit (pro se?) so you have a judge as a referee, and see how fast they document their "oops, never mind". In all likelihood, you'd get written evidence from them that you owe nothing, and it would never go to court.
– donjuedo
2 hours ago
4
Can you add a country tag?
– ventsyv
1 hour ago
34
34
Actually this sounds like just one more thing to add to your list of "awful things about the organization."
– shoover
4 hours ago
Actually this sounds like just one more thing to add to your list of "awful things about the organization."
– shoover
4 hours ago
1
1
Welcome to TheWorkplace! Please note this is not place to look for legal advice. There is LawStackExchange for general questions related to law, but please look for a professional to give you legal advice and help. Nonetheless, we can share advice here in terms on wheter this is normal/usual or not. AFAIK it isn't unless you had signed specific contracts with clauses warning you about the training costs. You might want to reach the company that licensed AutoCAD for you and try to work things out, as your former company will likely still need a license. Goodwill now can make everything easier.
– Mefitico
3 hours ago
Welcome to TheWorkplace! Please note this is not place to look for legal advice. There is LawStackExchange for general questions related to law, but please look for a professional to give you legal advice and help. Nonetheless, we can share advice here in terms on wheter this is normal/usual or not. AFAIK it isn't unless you had signed specific contracts with clauses warning you about the training costs. You might want to reach the company that licensed AutoCAD for you and try to work things out, as your former company will likely still need a license. Goodwill now can make everything easier.
– Mefitico
3 hours ago
Respond with a list of reasons why the company was awful along with a bill for $6000 in consulting fees. Don't actually do that, but it underscores that both parties attempted to engage, it was unsuccessful and after the fact conditions can't simply be dictated by one party.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
Respond with a list of reasons why the company was awful along with a bill for $6000 in consulting fees. Don't actually do that, but it underscores that both parties attempted to engage, it was unsuccessful and after the fact conditions can't simply be dictated by one party.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
You could file a lawsuit (pro se?) so you have a judge as a referee, and see how fast they document their "oops, never mind". In all likelihood, you'd get written evidence from them that you owe nothing, and it would never go to court.
– donjuedo
2 hours ago
You could file a lawsuit (pro se?) so you have a judge as a referee, and see how fast they document their "oops, never mind". In all likelihood, you'd get written evidence from them that you owe nothing, and it would never go to court.
– donjuedo
2 hours ago
4
4
Can you add a country tag?
– ventsyv
1 hour ago
Can you add a country tag?
– ventsyv
1 hour ago
|
show 2 more comments
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
Your question was,
I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
Based on what you said here,
I never signed anything saying that I'd owe them money if I quit - I have a copy of the signed employee agreement with nothing anywhere close to that in it. The AutoCAD license was installed on a work computer that never went home with me and I returned everything they gave me on my last day, down to the free shirt and water bottle.
Then I think the answer is pretty clearly, no. You can't be held responsible. It is sometimes the case that employment contracts include terms for reimbursement of specific expenses or repayment of specific types of benefits (ie an employer that pays for you to go get your Masters degree may have terms in your contract stating that you need to pay them back if you quit within a certain time frame), but that is apparently not the case for you.
It seems like your best course of action is to ignore the request. Any response you make may be seen by them as grounds to continue to push you. If they escalate, it would be appropriate for you to do so as well (ie get a lawyer involved). Otherwise, I would not acknowledge their request in any way.
add a comment |
Oh, keep this, and your signed agreement in a very secure location.
Depending on your location, you may be needing them for a civil suit. Your employer will probably end up wishing that it only cost them $7000.
FWIW: I am inferring the U.S. because of the currency denomination. You might want to specify a location tag.
11
@outerviewer make sure you keep every piece of documentation that you have - I had a letter that stated a date that solved an argument with a senior manager - he wanted to backdate my apprenticeship by 4 months to finish me early and save 4 months money... That one letter stopped him (He was not happy :) )
– Solar Mike
4 hours ago
add a comment |
I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
Right. It's a bluff to see if you would pay anyway.
Should I respond that I'm not paying, or just ignore this?
I would respond once and only once with something like:
"Since my employment agreement said nothing about being required to reimburse any training expenses if I left, I will not do so.
The AutoCAD license was installed and remains on a company computer. The computer was returned when I left. I am not responsible for the cost of this license and will not provide any reimbursement."
Then I would not respond to subsequent letters, although I would keep copies of everything.
In the unlikely event you are sued, make sure you have all the relevant facts and copies of all correspondence. I have a hard time imagining they would waste their time doing so, and an even harder time imagining they could win.
4
In a case like this where the company is so out of line, is it even in the OPs interest to respond? I sort of feel that doing so adds some legitimacy to the claim by acknowledging that it exists in the first place.
– Peter M
57 mins ago
Is it possible that besides a desire for repayment, there is also an element of harassment or vindictiveness?
– trognanders
46 mins ago
add a comment |
If you have no documentation stating that you owe them this money (in your contract/employment agreement/etc), then tell them as such: "I never agreed to this, go shove it" (depending on how you feel about this company, I might be tempted to use those exact words) and do not respond to any further communique. If they continue to "shout into the void", as it were, you may want to contact a lawyer regarding harassment.
If you feel like being extra cheeky though, you may want to suggest, at least, if you have to pay $1500 for the AutoCAD subscription, then it should be your property. Issue them a notice to have your AutoCAD license transferred to you on threat of a lawsuit for stolen property, and see what they say. Of course, this is likely to not work out in the way you hope it will, so only do it if you feel like being cheeky and having some fun with a possible potential downside cost down the road. I don't actually recommend doing this, I just think it would be funny to hear their response.
5
I think this advice is entertaining, but so so unprofessional. Be better than them (i.e. not a child). If you're going to stop responding to them after telling them to "shove it", then just don't respond to begin with. What do you aim to gain by starting a confrontation? Same with the AutoCAD license - so you ask them to transfer the license to you and they agree. Now what? You are still out $1500.
– Catsunami
3 hours ago
Agreed cheeky is all but never the professional answer. There is some professional merit though in the concept that if they expect someone to pay for resources they purchased for them, those resources must be transferred or at minimum prorated back for the unusable portion.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
Yeah, the AutoCAD thing in particular is horrible advice. If the boss wants to screw you over, they'll instantly agree. Suddenly, you went from "Not legally required to pay anything" to "Agreeing to buy an instance of AutoCAD for $1500 that you weren't planning on." After all, it doesn't cost the boss anything to take your $1500 and just buy another license.
– Kevin
46 mins ago
@Kevin I agree that that is horrible advice. As a CAD administrator, though, it would be really difficult and painstaking to transfer a license. While you can give anyone a product key, it is tied to a contract - a contract that likely has multiple Autodesk licenses. To really transfer ownership would probably involve direct assistance from Autodesk... good luck with that.
– Evan Elrod
38 mins ago
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "423"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: false,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
outerviewer is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworkplace.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f132898%2freceived-an-invoice-from-my-ex-employer-billing-me-for-training-how-to-handle%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(function ()
$("#show-editor-button input, #show-editor-button button").click(function ()
var showEditor = function()
$("#show-editor-button").hide();
$("#post-form").removeClass("dno");
StackExchange.editor.finallyInit();
;
var useFancy = $(this).data('confirm-use-fancy');
if(useFancy == 'True')
var popupTitle = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-title');
var popupBody = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-body');
var popupAccept = $(this).data('confirm-fancy-accept-button');
$(this).loadPopup(
url: '/post/self-answer-popup',
loaded: function(popup)
var pTitle = $(popup).find('h2');
var pBody = $(popup).find('.popup-body');
var pSubmit = $(popup).find('.popup-submit');
pTitle.text(popupTitle);
pBody.html(popupBody);
pSubmit.val(popupAccept).click(showEditor);
)
else
var confirmText = $(this).data('confirm-text');
if (confirmText ? confirm(confirmText) : true)
showEditor();
);
);
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Your question was,
I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
Based on what you said here,
I never signed anything saying that I'd owe them money if I quit - I have a copy of the signed employee agreement with nothing anywhere close to that in it. The AutoCAD license was installed on a work computer that never went home with me and I returned everything they gave me on my last day, down to the free shirt and water bottle.
Then I think the answer is pretty clearly, no. You can't be held responsible. It is sometimes the case that employment contracts include terms for reimbursement of specific expenses or repayment of specific types of benefits (ie an employer that pays for you to go get your Masters degree may have terms in your contract stating that you need to pay them back if you quit within a certain time frame), but that is apparently not the case for you.
It seems like your best course of action is to ignore the request. Any response you make may be seen by them as grounds to continue to push you. If they escalate, it would be appropriate for you to do so as well (ie get a lawyer involved). Otherwise, I would not acknowledge their request in any way.
add a comment |
Your question was,
I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
Based on what you said here,
I never signed anything saying that I'd owe them money if I quit - I have a copy of the signed employee agreement with nothing anywhere close to that in it. The AutoCAD license was installed on a work computer that never went home with me and I returned everything they gave me on my last day, down to the free shirt and water bottle.
Then I think the answer is pretty clearly, no. You can't be held responsible. It is sometimes the case that employment contracts include terms for reimbursement of specific expenses or repayment of specific types of benefits (ie an employer that pays for you to go get your Masters degree may have terms in your contract stating that you need to pay them back if you quit within a certain time frame), but that is apparently not the case for you.
It seems like your best course of action is to ignore the request. Any response you make may be seen by them as grounds to continue to push you. If they escalate, it would be appropriate for you to do so as well (ie get a lawyer involved). Otherwise, I would not acknowledge their request in any way.
add a comment |
Your question was,
I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
Based on what you said here,
I never signed anything saying that I'd owe them money if I quit - I have a copy of the signed employee agreement with nothing anywhere close to that in it. The AutoCAD license was installed on a work computer that never went home with me and I returned everything they gave me on my last day, down to the free shirt and water bottle.
Then I think the answer is pretty clearly, no. You can't be held responsible. It is sometimes the case that employment contracts include terms for reimbursement of specific expenses or repayment of specific types of benefits (ie an employer that pays for you to go get your Masters degree may have terms in your contract stating that you need to pay them back if you quit within a certain time frame), but that is apparently not the case for you.
It seems like your best course of action is to ignore the request. Any response you make may be seen by them as grounds to continue to push you. If they escalate, it would be appropriate for you to do so as well (ie get a lawyer involved). Otherwise, I would not acknowledge their request in any way.
Your question was,
I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
Based on what you said here,
I never signed anything saying that I'd owe them money if I quit - I have a copy of the signed employee agreement with nothing anywhere close to that in it. The AutoCAD license was installed on a work computer that never went home with me and I returned everything they gave me on my last day, down to the free shirt and water bottle.
Then I think the answer is pretty clearly, no. You can't be held responsible. It is sometimes the case that employment contracts include terms for reimbursement of specific expenses or repayment of specific types of benefits (ie an employer that pays for you to go get your Masters degree may have terms in your contract stating that you need to pay them back if you quit within a certain time frame), but that is apparently not the case for you.
It seems like your best course of action is to ignore the request. Any response you make may be seen by them as grounds to continue to push you. If they escalate, it would be appropriate for you to do so as well (ie get a lawyer involved). Otherwise, I would not acknowledge their request in any way.
answered 4 hours ago
dwizumdwizum
18.6k93660
18.6k93660
add a comment |
add a comment |
Oh, keep this, and your signed agreement in a very secure location.
Depending on your location, you may be needing them for a civil suit. Your employer will probably end up wishing that it only cost them $7000.
FWIW: I am inferring the U.S. because of the currency denomination. You might want to specify a location tag.
11
@outerviewer make sure you keep every piece of documentation that you have - I had a letter that stated a date that solved an argument with a senior manager - he wanted to backdate my apprenticeship by 4 months to finish me early and save 4 months money... That one letter stopped him (He was not happy :) )
– Solar Mike
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Oh, keep this, and your signed agreement in a very secure location.
Depending on your location, you may be needing them for a civil suit. Your employer will probably end up wishing that it only cost them $7000.
FWIW: I am inferring the U.S. because of the currency denomination. You might want to specify a location tag.
11
@outerviewer make sure you keep every piece of documentation that you have - I had a letter that stated a date that solved an argument with a senior manager - he wanted to backdate my apprenticeship by 4 months to finish me early and save 4 months money... That one letter stopped him (He was not happy :) )
– Solar Mike
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Oh, keep this, and your signed agreement in a very secure location.
Depending on your location, you may be needing them for a civil suit. Your employer will probably end up wishing that it only cost them $7000.
FWIW: I am inferring the U.S. because of the currency denomination. You might want to specify a location tag.
Oh, keep this, and your signed agreement in a very secure location.
Depending on your location, you may be needing them for a civil suit. Your employer will probably end up wishing that it only cost them $7000.
FWIW: I am inferring the U.S. because of the currency denomination. You might want to specify a location tag.
answered 4 hours ago
Wesley LongWesley Long
50.6k17109183
50.6k17109183
11
@outerviewer make sure you keep every piece of documentation that you have - I had a letter that stated a date that solved an argument with a senior manager - he wanted to backdate my apprenticeship by 4 months to finish me early and save 4 months money... That one letter stopped him (He was not happy :) )
– Solar Mike
4 hours ago
add a comment |
11
@outerviewer make sure you keep every piece of documentation that you have - I had a letter that stated a date that solved an argument with a senior manager - he wanted to backdate my apprenticeship by 4 months to finish me early and save 4 months money... That one letter stopped him (He was not happy :) )
– Solar Mike
4 hours ago
11
11
@outerviewer make sure you keep every piece of documentation that you have - I had a letter that stated a date that solved an argument with a senior manager - he wanted to backdate my apprenticeship by 4 months to finish me early and save 4 months money... That one letter stopped him (He was not happy :) )
– Solar Mike
4 hours ago
@outerviewer make sure you keep every piece of documentation that you have - I had a letter that stated a date that solved an argument with a senior manager - he wanted to backdate my apprenticeship by 4 months to finish me early and save 4 months money... That one letter stopped him (He was not happy :) )
– Solar Mike
4 hours ago
add a comment |
I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
Right. It's a bluff to see if you would pay anyway.
Should I respond that I'm not paying, or just ignore this?
I would respond once and only once with something like:
"Since my employment agreement said nothing about being required to reimburse any training expenses if I left, I will not do so.
The AutoCAD license was installed and remains on a company computer. The computer was returned when I left. I am not responsible for the cost of this license and will not provide any reimbursement."
Then I would not respond to subsequent letters, although I would keep copies of everything.
In the unlikely event you are sued, make sure you have all the relevant facts and copies of all correspondence. I have a hard time imagining they would waste their time doing so, and an even harder time imagining they could win.
4
In a case like this where the company is so out of line, is it even in the OPs interest to respond? I sort of feel that doing so adds some legitimacy to the claim by acknowledging that it exists in the first place.
– Peter M
57 mins ago
Is it possible that besides a desire for repayment, there is also an element of harassment or vindictiveness?
– trognanders
46 mins ago
add a comment |
I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
Right. It's a bluff to see if you would pay anyway.
Should I respond that I'm not paying, or just ignore this?
I would respond once and only once with something like:
"Since my employment agreement said nothing about being required to reimburse any training expenses if I left, I will not do so.
The AutoCAD license was installed and remains on a company computer. The computer was returned when I left. I am not responsible for the cost of this license and will not provide any reimbursement."
Then I would not respond to subsequent letters, although I would keep copies of everything.
In the unlikely event you are sued, make sure you have all the relevant facts and copies of all correspondence. I have a hard time imagining they would waste their time doing so, and an even harder time imagining they could win.
4
In a case like this where the company is so out of line, is it even in the OPs interest to respond? I sort of feel that doing so adds some legitimacy to the claim by acknowledging that it exists in the first place.
– Peter M
57 mins ago
Is it possible that besides a desire for repayment, there is also an element of harassment or vindictiveness?
– trognanders
46 mins ago
add a comment |
I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
Right. It's a bluff to see if you would pay anyway.
Should I respond that I'm not paying, or just ignore this?
I would respond once and only once with something like:
"Since my employment agreement said nothing about being required to reimburse any training expenses if I left, I will not do so.
The AutoCAD license was installed and remains on a company computer. The computer was returned when I left. I am not responsible for the cost of this license and will not provide any reimbursement."
Then I would not respond to subsequent letters, although I would keep copies of everything.
In the unlikely event you are sued, make sure you have all the relevant facts and copies of all correspondence. I have a hard time imagining they would waste their time doing so, and an even harder time imagining they could win.
I can't seriously be held responsible for this, right?
Right. It's a bluff to see if you would pay anyway.
Should I respond that I'm not paying, or just ignore this?
I would respond once and only once with something like:
"Since my employment agreement said nothing about being required to reimburse any training expenses if I left, I will not do so.
The AutoCAD license was installed and remains on a company computer. The computer was returned when I left. I am not responsible for the cost of this license and will not provide any reimbursement."
Then I would not respond to subsequent letters, although I would keep copies of everything.
In the unlikely event you are sued, make sure you have all the relevant facts and copies of all correspondence. I have a hard time imagining they would waste their time doing so, and an even harder time imagining they could win.
answered 2 hours ago
Joe StrazzereJoe Strazzere
252k1277311043
252k1277311043
4
In a case like this where the company is so out of line, is it even in the OPs interest to respond? I sort of feel that doing so adds some legitimacy to the claim by acknowledging that it exists in the first place.
– Peter M
57 mins ago
Is it possible that besides a desire for repayment, there is also an element of harassment or vindictiveness?
– trognanders
46 mins ago
add a comment |
4
In a case like this where the company is so out of line, is it even in the OPs interest to respond? I sort of feel that doing so adds some legitimacy to the claim by acknowledging that it exists in the first place.
– Peter M
57 mins ago
Is it possible that besides a desire for repayment, there is also an element of harassment or vindictiveness?
– trognanders
46 mins ago
4
4
In a case like this where the company is so out of line, is it even in the OPs interest to respond? I sort of feel that doing so adds some legitimacy to the claim by acknowledging that it exists in the first place.
– Peter M
57 mins ago
In a case like this where the company is so out of line, is it even in the OPs interest to respond? I sort of feel that doing so adds some legitimacy to the claim by acknowledging that it exists in the first place.
– Peter M
57 mins ago
Is it possible that besides a desire for repayment, there is also an element of harassment or vindictiveness?
– trognanders
46 mins ago
Is it possible that besides a desire for repayment, there is also an element of harassment or vindictiveness?
– trognanders
46 mins ago
add a comment |
If you have no documentation stating that you owe them this money (in your contract/employment agreement/etc), then tell them as such: "I never agreed to this, go shove it" (depending on how you feel about this company, I might be tempted to use those exact words) and do not respond to any further communique. If they continue to "shout into the void", as it were, you may want to contact a lawyer regarding harassment.
If you feel like being extra cheeky though, you may want to suggest, at least, if you have to pay $1500 for the AutoCAD subscription, then it should be your property. Issue them a notice to have your AutoCAD license transferred to you on threat of a lawsuit for stolen property, and see what they say. Of course, this is likely to not work out in the way you hope it will, so only do it if you feel like being cheeky and having some fun with a possible potential downside cost down the road. I don't actually recommend doing this, I just think it would be funny to hear their response.
5
I think this advice is entertaining, but so so unprofessional. Be better than them (i.e. not a child). If you're going to stop responding to them after telling them to "shove it", then just don't respond to begin with. What do you aim to gain by starting a confrontation? Same with the AutoCAD license - so you ask them to transfer the license to you and they agree. Now what? You are still out $1500.
– Catsunami
3 hours ago
Agreed cheeky is all but never the professional answer. There is some professional merit though in the concept that if they expect someone to pay for resources they purchased for them, those resources must be transferred or at minimum prorated back for the unusable portion.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
Yeah, the AutoCAD thing in particular is horrible advice. If the boss wants to screw you over, they'll instantly agree. Suddenly, you went from "Not legally required to pay anything" to "Agreeing to buy an instance of AutoCAD for $1500 that you weren't planning on." After all, it doesn't cost the boss anything to take your $1500 and just buy another license.
– Kevin
46 mins ago
@Kevin I agree that that is horrible advice. As a CAD administrator, though, it would be really difficult and painstaking to transfer a license. While you can give anyone a product key, it is tied to a contract - a contract that likely has multiple Autodesk licenses. To really transfer ownership would probably involve direct assistance from Autodesk... good luck with that.
– Evan Elrod
38 mins ago
add a comment |
If you have no documentation stating that you owe them this money (in your contract/employment agreement/etc), then tell them as such: "I never agreed to this, go shove it" (depending on how you feel about this company, I might be tempted to use those exact words) and do not respond to any further communique. If they continue to "shout into the void", as it were, you may want to contact a lawyer regarding harassment.
If you feel like being extra cheeky though, you may want to suggest, at least, if you have to pay $1500 for the AutoCAD subscription, then it should be your property. Issue them a notice to have your AutoCAD license transferred to you on threat of a lawsuit for stolen property, and see what they say. Of course, this is likely to not work out in the way you hope it will, so only do it if you feel like being cheeky and having some fun with a possible potential downside cost down the road. I don't actually recommend doing this, I just think it would be funny to hear their response.
5
I think this advice is entertaining, but so so unprofessional. Be better than them (i.e. not a child). If you're going to stop responding to them after telling them to "shove it", then just don't respond to begin with. What do you aim to gain by starting a confrontation? Same with the AutoCAD license - so you ask them to transfer the license to you and they agree. Now what? You are still out $1500.
– Catsunami
3 hours ago
Agreed cheeky is all but never the professional answer. There is some professional merit though in the concept that if they expect someone to pay for resources they purchased for them, those resources must be transferred or at minimum prorated back for the unusable portion.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
Yeah, the AutoCAD thing in particular is horrible advice. If the boss wants to screw you over, they'll instantly agree. Suddenly, you went from "Not legally required to pay anything" to "Agreeing to buy an instance of AutoCAD for $1500 that you weren't planning on." After all, it doesn't cost the boss anything to take your $1500 and just buy another license.
– Kevin
46 mins ago
@Kevin I agree that that is horrible advice. As a CAD administrator, though, it would be really difficult and painstaking to transfer a license. While you can give anyone a product key, it is tied to a contract - a contract that likely has multiple Autodesk licenses. To really transfer ownership would probably involve direct assistance from Autodesk... good luck with that.
– Evan Elrod
38 mins ago
add a comment |
If you have no documentation stating that you owe them this money (in your contract/employment agreement/etc), then tell them as such: "I never agreed to this, go shove it" (depending on how you feel about this company, I might be tempted to use those exact words) and do not respond to any further communique. If they continue to "shout into the void", as it were, you may want to contact a lawyer regarding harassment.
If you feel like being extra cheeky though, you may want to suggest, at least, if you have to pay $1500 for the AutoCAD subscription, then it should be your property. Issue them a notice to have your AutoCAD license transferred to you on threat of a lawsuit for stolen property, and see what they say. Of course, this is likely to not work out in the way you hope it will, so only do it if you feel like being cheeky and having some fun with a possible potential downside cost down the road. I don't actually recommend doing this, I just think it would be funny to hear their response.
If you have no documentation stating that you owe them this money (in your contract/employment agreement/etc), then tell them as such: "I never agreed to this, go shove it" (depending on how you feel about this company, I might be tempted to use those exact words) and do not respond to any further communique. If they continue to "shout into the void", as it were, you may want to contact a lawyer regarding harassment.
If you feel like being extra cheeky though, you may want to suggest, at least, if you have to pay $1500 for the AutoCAD subscription, then it should be your property. Issue them a notice to have your AutoCAD license transferred to you on threat of a lawsuit for stolen property, and see what they say. Of course, this is likely to not work out in the way you hope it will, so only do it if you feel like being cheeky and having some fun with a possible potential downside cost down the road. I don't actually recommend doing this, I just think it would be funny to hear their response.
answered 4 hours ago
Ertai87Ertai87
11.9k31534
11.9k31534
5
I think this advice is entertaining, but so so unprofessional. Be better than them (i.e. not a child). If you're going to stop responding to them after telling them to "shove it", then just don't respond to begin with. What do you aim to gain by starting a confrontation? Same with the AutoCAD license - so you ask them to transfer the license to you and they agree. Now what? You are still out $1500.
– Catsunami
3 hours ago
Agreed cheeky is all but never the professional answer. There is some professional merit though in the concept that if they expect someone to pay for resources they purchased for them, those resources must be transferred or at minimum prorated back for the unusable portion.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
Yeah, the AutoCAD thing in particular is horrible advice. If the boss wants to screw you over, they'll instantly agree. Suddenly, you went from "Not legally required to pay anything" to "Agreeing to buy an instance of AutoCAD for $1500 that you weren't planning on." After all, it doesn't cost the boss anything to take your $1500 and just buy another license.
– Kevin
46 mins ago
@Kevin I agree that that is horrible advice. As a CAD administrator, though, it would be really difficult and painstaking to transfer a license. While you can give anyone a product key, it is tied to a contract - a contract that likely has multiple Autodesk licenses. To really transfer ownership would probably involve direct assistance from Autodesk... good luck with that.
– Evan Elrod
38 mins ago
add a comment |
5
I think this advice is entertaining, but so so unprofessional. Be better than them (i.e. not a child). If you're going to stop responding to them after telling them to "shove it", then just don't respond to begin with. What do you aim to gain by starting a confrontation? Same with the AutoCAD license - so you ask them to transfer the license to you and they agree. Now what? You are still out $1500.
– Catsunami
3 hours ago
Agreed cheeky is all but never the professional answer. There is some professional merit though in the concept that if they expect someone to pay for resources they purchased for them, those resources must be transferred or at minimum prorated back for the unusable portion.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
Yeah, the AutoCAD thing in particular is horrible advice. If the boss wants to screw you over, they'll instantly agree. Suddenly, you went from "Not legally required to pay anything" to "Agreeing to buy an instance of AutoCAD for $1500 that you weren't planning on." After all, it doesn't cost the boss anything to take your $1500 and just buy another license.
– Kevin
46 mins ago
@Kevin I agree that that is horrible advice. As a CAD administrator, though, it would be really difficult and painstaking to transfer a license. While you can give anyone a product key, it is tied to a contract - a contract that likely has multiple Autodesk licenses. To really transfer ownership would probably involve direct assistance from Autodesk... good luck with that.
– Evan Elrod
38 mins ago
5
5
I think this advice is entertaining, but so so unprofessional. Be better than them (i.e. not a child). If you're going to stop responding to them after telling them to "shove it", then just don't respond to begin with. What do you aim to gain by starting a confrontation? Same with the AutoCAD license - so you ask them to transfer the license to you and they agree. Now what? You are still out $1500.
– Catsunami
3 hours ago
I think this advice is entertaining, but so so unprofessional. Be better than them (i.e. not a child). If you're going to stop responding to them after telling them to "shove it", then just don't respond to begin with. What do you aim to gain by starting a confrontation? Same with the AutoCAD license - so you ask them to transfer the license to you and they agree. Now what? You are still out $1500.
– Catsunami
3 hours ago
Agreed cheeky is all but never the professional answer. There is some professional merit though in the concept that if they expect someone to pay for resources they purchased for them, those resources must be transferred or at minimum prorated back for the unusable portion.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
Agreed cheeky is all but never the professional answer. There is some professional merit though in the concept that if they expect someone to pay for resources they purchased for them, those resources must be transferred or at minimum prorated back for the unusable portion.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
Yeah, the AutoCAD thing in particular is horrible advice. If the boss wants to screw you over, they'll instantly agree. Suddenly, you went from "Not legally required to pay anything" to "Agreeing to buy an instance of AutoCAD for $1500 that you weren't planning on." After all, it doesn't cost the boss anything to take your $1500 and just buy another license.
– Kevin
46 mins ago
Yeah, the AutoCAD thing in particular is horrible advice. If the boss wants to screw you over, they'll instantly agree. Suddenly, you went from "Not legally required to pay anything" to "Agreeing to buy an instance of AutoCAD for $1500 that you weren't planning on." After all, it doesn't cost the boss anything to take your $1500 and just buy another license.
– Kevin
46 mins ago
@Kevin I agree that that is horrible advice. As a CAD administrator, though, it would be really difficult and painstaking to transfer a license. While you can give anyone a product key, it is tied to a contract - a contract that likely has multiple Autodesk licenses. To really transfer ownership would probably involve direct assistance from Autodesk... good luck with that.
– Evan Elrod
38 mins ago
@Kevin I agree that that is horrible advice. As a CAD administrator, though, it would be really difficult and painstaking to transfer a license. While you can give anyone a product key, it is tied to a contract - a contract that likely has multiple Autodesk licenses. To really transfer ownership would probably involve direct assistance from Autodesk... good luck with that.
– Evan Elrod
38 mins ago
add a comment |
outerviewer is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
outerviewer is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
outerviewer is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
outerviewer is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Thanks for contributing an answer to The Workplace Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fworkplace.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f132898%2freceived-an-invoice-from-my-ex-employer-billing-me-for-training-how-to-handle%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
34
Actually this sounds like just one more thing to add to your list of "awful things about the organization."
– shoover
4 hours ago
1
Welcome to TheWorkplace! Please note this is not place to look for legal advice. There is LawStackExchange for general questions related to law, but please look for a professional to give you legal advice and help. Nonetheless, we can share advice here in terms on wheter this is normal/usual or not. AFAIK it isn't unless you had signed specific contracts with clauses warning you about the training costs. You might want to reach the company that licensed AutoCAD for you and try to work things out, as your former company will likely still need a license. Goodwill now can make everything easier.
– Mefitico
3 hours ago
Respond with a list of reasons why the company was awful along with a bill for $6000 in consulting fees. Don't actually do that, but it underscores that both parties attempted to engage, it was unsuccessful and after the fact conditions can't simply be dictated by one party.
– John Spiegel
3 hours ago
You could file a lawsuit (pro se?) so you have a judge as a referee, and see how fast they document their "oops, never mind". In all likelihood, you'd get written evidence from them that you owe nothing, and it would never go to court.
– donjuedo
2 hours ago
4
Can you add a country tag?
– ventsyv
1 hour ago